Tax facts – Taxpayer Penalties

Taxpayers who do not meet their tax obligations may face penalty or interest charges. To avoid such charges, you need to pay the full amount of tax you owe by the due date. This is cut and dry. If you pay late, you will be charged interest.

The main kinds of charges for failing to meet tax obligations are:

A late filing penalty if you do not file a return by the due date

A late payment penalty if you post or deliver a payment to IRD after the date it was due

Interest on the amount of tax you owe if you have underpaid your tax. The interest rates charged are based on market rates

A shortfall penalty where the correct amount of tax is higher than the amount you paid (eg, because of an understatement of tax, or where the amount of a refund or loss is reduced). These penalties can be as high as 150% (for evasion) and may include imprionment for serious instances of evasion

EMS non payment penalties where you file an employer monthly schedule but do not pay the full amount payable on that schedule. These penalties are in addition to any of the other penalites that may also then be payable.

Solutions such as tax pooling can also be used to ease taxpayer concerns and the resulting exposure to use of money interest.